BACKGROUND
[0001] The present invention relates to heterodyne millimeter wave radar systems, and more
particularly, to a low cost collision avoidance sensor and radar for use in automotive
speed and collision avoidance systems.
[0002] The assignee of the present invention develops automotive cruise control and collision
avoidance systems, and the like. As a result of angular resolution requirements and
antenna size limitations, development relating to automotive cruise control and collision
avoidance applications has been performed in the 75 to 95 GHz frequency band. Due
to the maturity of the technology used at these shorter wavelengths, the majority
of the system hardware at these wavelengths uses conventional waveguide transmission
and cavity techniques.
[0003] However, waveguide components, manufactured in any form, are limited in how inexpensively
they can be produced in high volume production. In addition, given the requirements
for less than 2 degree resolution and 30 degree azimuth coverage, heretofore, a narrow
beam mechanically scanned antenna has been the only available option. For many reasons
a gimbled flapping (mechanically scanned) antenna does not provide an optimum solution.
[0004] Another approach that might be adapted for use in the 75 to 95 GHz frequency band,
seldom mentioned due to the present state-of-the-art, is a slotted waveguide phased
array antenna. This antenna, with its electronically scanned beam capability, works
well at lower frequencies, but has a number of limitations in the 75 to 95 GHz band.
These limitations include degraded electrical performance and very high cost even
in high production quantities.
[0005] Therefore, it is an objective of the present invention to provide for a heterodyne
millimeter wave radar system employing a low cost sensor, or RF camera, for use in
automotive speed and collision avoidance systems, and the like.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] In order to meet the above and other objectives the present invention employs a heterodyne
receiver antenna array that may be used in scanning applications including radiometric
or radar applications, and the like. More specifically the present invention provides
for a 35-300 GHz millimeter wave electronic scanning array or sensor for use in collision
avoidance applications, and the like. The present invention provides the capability
of a conventional mechanically scanned system at a fraction of the cost.
[0007] One embodiment of the present invention comprises a radar that includes a millimeter
wave radar transmitter having a flood beam antenna, and a radar signal processor for
processing radar return signals to produce radar output signals. An RF sensor in accordance
with the present invention is provided that comprises a receive antenna is coupled
to the radar signal processor and includes a plurality of antenna elements, a plurality
of mixers respectively coupled to outputs of the plurality of antenna elements and
to the transmitter by means of a coupler, a plurality of filter circuits respectively
coupled to outputs of the plurality of mixers, a multiplexer coupled to outputs of
the plurality of filter circuits that comprises as a multiple input, single output
switch for sequentially outputting video signals derived from radar signals received
by each of the receive antenna elements, and a lens for imaging radar returns onto
each of the plurality of antenna elements.
[0008] More particularly, the radar includes an FMCW transmitter, the radar signal processor
and the RF sensor. The FMCW transmitter comprises a reference oscillator, a waveform
control circuit, a Gunn transmitter that comprises a transmitter and mixer local oscillator
for FMCW radar energy transmission, and as a mixer local oscillator for radar energy
reception, a beam selector circuit, a harmonic mixer coupled to the Gunn transmitter
and to the waveform control circuit, and the flood beam antenna.
[0009] The radar signal processor comprises an amplifier, a video blanking circuit coupled
to the amplifier, an analog to digital (A/D) converter coupled to the video blanking
circuit, a range/Doppler processor coupled to the analog to digital (A/D) converter,
a detect/tracking processor coupled to the range/Doppler processor, a display coupled
to the detect/tracking processor, and a master timing reference coupled to the waveform
control circuit, the beam selector circuit, the video blanking circuit, the analog
to digital (A/D) converter, the range/Doppler processor, and the detect/tracking processor
to control the timing of the signal flow therebetween.
[0010] The RF sensor comprises a receive antenna that includes a plurality of antenna elements,
a plurality of mixers respectively coupled to outputs of the plurality of antenna
elements and coupled to the Gunn transmitter by means of a coupler, a plurality of
filter circuits respectively coupled to outputs of the plurality of mixers, a multiplexer
coupled to outputs of the plurality of filter circuits that functions as a multiple
input, single output switch for sequentially outputting video signals derive from
radar signals received by the receive antenna elements, and a lens for imaging radar
returns onto each of the plurality of antenna elements.
[0011] More specifically, each antenna element comprises a linearly tapered slot, a mixer
diode coupled to the linearly tapered slot, a planer tuned backshort coupled to the
mixer diode, an RF low pass filter coupled to the mixer diode, an amplifier coupled
to the RF low pass filter, and an IF low pass filter coupled to the amplifier
[0012] The RF sensor comprises a support tube, a pair of support members secured to the
tube, a backing plate secured to the support members, a dielectric antenna clement
board secured to the support members and backing plate that comprises the antenna
elements, and a slotted waveguide coupled to the backing plate and dielectric element
board for coupling energy out of the antenna elements. Each antenna element may comprise
a linearly tapered slot, a mixer diode coupled to the linearly tapered slot, and a
planer tuned backshort coupled to the mixer diode.
[0013] The sensor includes two antennas, one for transmission (1.6 inches x 0.18 inches)
and one for reception (5 inches in diameter), and operates at 91 GHz. The transmit
antenna has a beamwidth of 35 degrees in azimuth illuminating a 55 meter sector in
front of a vehicle and 100 meter range) and 6 degrees in elevation. The receive antenna
comprises a quasioptical focal plane line array, which, with a simple lens shape,
provides 16 independent simultaneous overlapping 1.8 degree beams, with a field-of-view
of 30 degrees across the azimuth plane. By using optical techniques at the image plane
of the lens antenna, it has been possible to incorporate, using printed circuits,
the individual integrated (feed-mixer/LO coupler) elements to generate a fully sampled
array (1 beamwidth separation). The beam position selection for the sensor is done
at the IF frequency output of the individual elements.
[0014] The present invention provides for a very low cost automotive collision avoidance
sensor, or RF camera. The present invention provides a very low cost approach to achieving
high angle resolution, adequate field-of-view, low loss, and an efficient non-mechanical
scanning solution to the automotive collision avoidance problem. As example, the material
and labor costs to construct the lens/16 element portion of the first proof-of-principle
model was 300 dollars (excluding mixer diodes).
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015] The various features and advantages of the present invention may be more readily
understood with reference to the following detailed description taken in conjunction
with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate like structural
elements, and in which:
Fig. 1 is a block diagram of an automotive-speed control and collision avoidance system
employing an RF sensor or camera in accordance with the principles of the present
invention;
Fig. 2 shows a rear view of the receive antenna of the system of Fig. 1;
Figs. 3a 3b and 3c show top, side and bottom views, respectively, of individual antenna
elements of the receive antenna of Fig. 1; and
Fig. 4 shows that for 16 superimposed 1.8° beamwidth element outputs over a 29° FOV,
the return energy is changed in angle for the system of Fig. 1.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0016] Referring to the drawing figures, Fig. 1 is a block diagram of an automotive-speed
control and collision avoidance system 10 or radar system 10, employing an RF sensor
20, or camera 20, in accordance with the principles of the present invention. Fig.
1 illustrates a system block diagram of a proof-of-principle model of the RF sensor
20. The approach implemented in the present invention extends well-understood optical
techniques to longer (1000X) millimeter wavelengths, and employs a low cost fabrication
technique to produce printed array elements employed in the sensor 20.
[0017] The system 10 is comprised of an FMCW transmitter 11 that included a reference oscillator
12, a waveform control circuit 13, a Gunn transmitter 14, a beam selector circuit
16, a harmonic mixer 15, and a flood beam antenna 17. These components are interconnected
in a conventional manner as is illustrated in Fig. 1. The Gunn transmitter 14 is used
in a conventional manner as a transmitter and mixer local oscillator for FMCW radar
energy transmission. The Gunn transmitter 14 is also used in a conventional manner
as a mixer local oscillator only, without the use of the flood beam antenna 17, for
receiver applications.
[0018] The RF sensor 20 comprises a receiver 21, or receive antenna 21, that includes a
plurality of antenna elements 21a. Each of the antenna elements 21a are coupled by
way of a mixer 22 through a filter circuit 23 to a multiplexer 24. The multiplexer
24 functions as a multiple input, single output switch 25 that is controlled by means
of the beam selector circuit 16 to selectively and sequentially outputting video signals
derived from radar signals received by the receive antenna 21. Each of the mixers
22 is coupled to the Gunn transmitter 14 by means of a coupler 26, as is the harmonic
mixer 15. A lens 27 is provided that is used to image radar returns from an image
scene onto each of the plurality of antenna elements 21a of the receive antenna 21.
[0019] The output of the multiplexer 24 is coupled to a radar signal processor 30 that includes
a amplifier 31 coupled through a video blanking circuit 32 and an analog to digital
(A/D) converter 33 to a range/Doppler processor 34. The output of the range/Doppler
processor 34 is coupled to a detect/tracking processor 35 whose output is coupled
to a display 36, for example. A master timing reference 37 is coupled to the waveform
control circuit 13, the beam selector circuit 16, the video blanking circuit 32, the
analog to digital (A/D) converter 33, the range/Doppler processor 34, and the detect/tracking
processor 35 to control the timing of the signal flow between the various components
of the system 10.
[0020] A more detailed description of the RF sensor 20 is given below with reference to
Figs. 2 and 3a-3c. Details of the receive antenna 21 are shown in Fig. 2, which shows
a rear view of the receive antenna 21 of the system 10 of Fig. 1. The lens 27 employed
in the receive antenna 21 comprises a 5.2 inch diameter polystyrene (n = 1.6) plano-convex
lens 27 with an

. The lens 27 is housed in a support tube 40. A pair of support members 41 are secured
to the tube 40 which secure a backing plate 42 onto which is disposed a Kapton element
board 43 that comprises the antenna elements 21a. A slotted waveguide 44 comprising
a plurality of coupling slots 54 (corresponding to the couplers 26 in Fig. 1) is coupled
to the backing plate 42 and Kapton element board 43 that is used to couple energy
our of the antenna elements 21a. The coupling slots 54 are formed by etching a copper
film that forms a wall of the waveguide 44.
[0021] Individual antenna elements 21a are comprised of a linearly tapered slot 47, a mixer
diode 46, a planer tuned backshort 49, an RF low pass filter 51, an amplifier 52,
an IF low pass filter 53, and a local oscillator coupling 48, the details of which
are shown in Figs. 3a-3c. More particularly, Figs. 3a, 3b and 3c show top, side and
bottom views, respectively, of the receive antenna 21 of Fig. 1. The circuit elements
shown in Figs. 3a-3c are generally well known in the art.
[0022] A 10 dB illumination taper on the lens 27 is accomplished by using a 0.12 inch slot
antenna aperture. This offsets the elements 21a in their physical position from its
axial center by 0.75 of the half power beamwidth while allowing them to fully sample
the focal plane. At approximately the apex of the tapered slot antenna elements 21a,
a GaAs Schottky mixer diode 46 is bonded to two fins 45 of each antenna element 21a.
This provides a transition for received RF energy to the impedance of the mixer diode
46. The slot width at the base of the fins 45 is 0.005 inches and serves as a transmission
line for the energy not absorbed by the mixer diode 46. The planer tuned backshort
49 is positioned at a location that reflects the energy in proper phase back to the
mixer diode 46.
[0023] The antenna elements 21a are printed on a sheet of 0.001 inch thick Kapton dielectric
element board 43 with 0.5 ounce copper. The size of the sheet comprising dielectric
element board 43 is 2.6 inches x 0.75 inches. The element board 43 is registered and
bonded using silver epoxy adhesive to the narrow wall of the slotted waveguide 44.
The H-plane dimensions of the slotted waveguide 44 are made such that the separation
between slots 47 of the slotted waveguide 44 is one wavelength in the waveguide and
coincides with the transmission line separation. The angle of the waveguide slots
47 varies to maintain constant output over the length of the slotted waveguide 44.
This energy couples through the 0.001 inch thick Kapton dielectric element board 43
into the mixer diodes 46 and serves as the local oscillator. The remaining energy
is transmitted into space by way of the flood beam antenna 17.
[0024] There are several options available in selecting the beam position at IF outputs
48 of the antenna elements 21a. The proof of principle model uses a single pole 16
throw switch 25, or multiplexer 24, to connect a desired antenna element 21a to the
amplifier 31. Another option may include gain and integration circuitry (provided
by the amplifier 52, and IF low pass filter 53) as part of each element so that energy
is not lost during IF scanning.
[0025] Tests were conducted on the proof-of-principle system 10 to demonstrate line array
operation. The elements 21a were spaced 0.17 inches, or one beamwidth, apart. Fig.
4 shows that for 16 superimposed 1.8° beamwidth antenna element outputs over a 29
FOV, the return energy is changed in angle.
[0026] The sensor 20 includes two antennas 17, 21, the transmit antenna 17 (1.6 inches x
0.18 inches) and the receive antenna 21 (5 inches in diameter), and operates at 91
GHz. The transmit antenna 17 has a beamwidth of 35 degrees in azimuth (illuminating
a 55 meter sector in front of a vehicle, for example, on which it is disposed) at
a 100 meter range and 6 degrees in elevation. The receive antenna 21 uses the quasioptical
focal plane line array of antenna elements 21a, which, in conjunction with a simple
shape lens 27, provides 16 independent simultaneous overlapping 1.8 degree beams,
with a field-of-view of 30 degrees across the azimuth plane. By using optical techniques,
at the image plane of the receive antenna 21, the present sensor 20 incorporates on
printed circuits (the element board 43), the individual integrated (feed-mixer/LO
coupler) elements 21a that generate a fully sampled array (1 beamwidth separation).
The beam position selection for the sensor 20 is done at the IF frequency output 48
of the individual elements 21a.
[0027] The present invention provides a very low cost approach for providing a sensor with
high angle resolution, adequate field-of-view, low loss, and an efficient non-mechanical
scanning solution for the automotive speed and collision avoidance applications. By
way of example, the material and labor costs to construct the lens 27 and 16 antenna
elements 21a of the proof-of-principle model of the sensor 20 was 300 dollars, excluding
mixer diodes 46.
[0028] As discussed above, the RF sensor 20 was developed for automatic collision avoidance
applications where high angular resolution, a large FOV in the azimuth plane, and
a single beam in elevation are required. For application requiring a two axis antenna
array the element boards 43 may be stacked to produce a 16 x 16 array. Furthermore,
while the above-described embodiment employs a 16 element array, the sensor 20 of
the present invention may be readily expanded to employ an antenna 21 having 20 elements
21a, for example. Consequently, the present invention is not limited in the number
of antenna elements 21a comprising the single plane array. The larger array provides
for a larger field of view, and
[0029] The heart of the present invention is a heterodyne receiver array (the receive antenna
21) that may be used in many applications, including radiometric or radar applications,
and the like. The present invention provides for a 35-300 GHz millimeter wave electronic
scanning array or sensor 20 for use in collision avoidance applications, and the like.
The present invention provides the capability of a conventional mechanically scanned
system.
[0030] Thus there has been described a new and improved collision avoidance sensor for use
in such automotive speed and collision avoidance systems. It is to be understood that
the above-described embodiment is merely illustrative of some of the many specific
embodiments that represent applications of the principles of the present invention.
Clearly, numerous and other arrangements can be readily devised by those skilled in
the art without departing from the scope of the invention.
1. Radar apparatus (10) characterized by:
a millimeter wave radar transmitter (11) comprising a flood beam antenna (17);
a radar signal processor (30) for processing radar return signals to produce radar
output signals; and
an RF sensor (20) comprising a receive antenna (21) that is characterized by:
a plurality of antenna elements (21a);
a plurality of mixers (22) respectively coupled to outputs of the plurality of
antenna elements (21a) and coupled to the transmitter (14) by means of a coupler (26);
a plurality of filter circuits (23) respectively coupled to outputs of the plurality
of mixers (22);
a multiplexer (24) coupled to outputs of the plurality of filter circuits (23)
that comprises as a multiple input, single output switch (25) for sequentially outputting
video signals derived from radar signals received by each of the receive antenna elements
(21a); and
a lens (27) for imaging radar returns onto each of the plurality of antenna elements
(21a).
2. The apparatus (10) of Claim 1 wherein the RF sensor (20) is characterized by:
a support tube (40);
a pair of support members (41) secured to the tube (40);
a backing plate (42) secured to the support members (41);
a dielectric antenna element board (43) secured to the support members (41) and
backing plate (42) that comprises the antenna elements (21a); and
a slotted waveguide (44) coupled to the backing plate (42) and dielectric element
board (43) for coupling energy out of the antenna elements (21a).
3. The apparatus (10) of Claim 2 wherein each antenna element (21a) is characterized
by:
a linearly tapered slot (47);
a mixer diode (46) coupled to the linearly tapered slot (47);
a planer tuned backshort (49) coupled to the mixer diode (46);
an RF low pass filter (51) coupled to the mixer diode (46);
an amplifier (52) coupled to the RF low pass filter (51); and
an IF low pass filter (51) coupled to the amplifier (52).
4. The apparatus (10) of Claim 1 wherein:
the millimeter wave radar transmitter (11) comprises an FMCW transmitter (11) characterized
by:
a reference oscillator (12);
a waveform control circuit (13);
a Gunn transmitter (14) that comprises a transmitter and mixer local oscillator
for FMCW radar energy transmission, and a mixer local oscillator for radar energy
reception;
a beam selector circuit (16); and
a harmonic mixer (15) coupled to the Gunn transmitter (14) and to the waveform
control circuit (13);
and wherein the radar signal processor (30) is characterized by:
an amplifier (31);
a video blanking circuit (32) coupled to the amplifier;
an analog to digital (A/D) converter (33) coupled to the video blanking circuit
(32);
a range/Doppler processor (34) coupled to the analog to digital (A/D) converter
(33);
a detect/tracking processor (35) coupled to the range/Doppler processor (34);
a display (36) coupled to the detect/tracking processor (35); and
a master timing reference (37) coupled to the waveform control circuit (13), the
beam selector circuit (16), the video blanking circuit (32), the analog to digital
(A/D) converter (33), the range/Doppler processor (34), and the detect/tracking processor
(35) to control the timing of the signal flow therebetween.
5. The apparatus (10) of Claim 4 wherein the lens (27) is characterized by polystyrene.
6. The apparatus (10) of Claim 4 wherein the lens (27) has a (10) dB illumination taper.
7. The apparatus (10) of Claim 1 wherein the RF sensor (20) is characterized by:
a support tube (40);
a pair of support members (41) secured to the tube (40);
a backing plate (42) secured to the support members (41);
a dielectric antenna element board (43) secured to the support members (41) and
backing plate (42) that comprises the antenna elements (21a); and
a slotted waveguide coupled to the backing plate (42) and dielectric element board
(43) for coupling energy out of the antenna elements (21a).
8. The apparatus (10) of Claim 7 wherein each antenna element board (43) is characterized
by:
a linearly tapered slot (47);
a mixer diode (46) coupled to the linearly tapered slot (47);
a planer tuned backshort (49) coupled to the mixer diode (46);
an RF low pass filter (51) coupled to the mixer diode (46);
an amplifier (52) coupled to the RF low pass filter (51);
an IF low pass filter (51) coupled to the amplifier (52); and
a waveguide slot (54) adjacent the mixer diode (46).
9. The apparatus (10) of Claim 8 wherein the slot taper offsets the physical position
of the element (21a) from an axial center by 0.75 of the half power beamwidth while
allowing it to fully sample its focal plane.
10. The apparatus (10) of Claim 9 wherein the element board (43) is registered and bonded
using adhesive to a wall of a slotted waveguide (44) coupled to the mixer diode (46).